Anonymous wrote:I agree op. I’m a parent of an only and I can never get a play date. Everyone is always too busy. My son plays a sport each season and does karate, but it’s not the same as kids getting together at a house and playing. I’m about to look for an only child support group to see if any other parents want to set up play dates. I’ve also considered maybe the parents don’t want to hang with me or my son which has given me a complex as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, OP, it seems ironic to me that this thread has exactly proven your point about being competitively busy. Of course, the lesson that seems to be repetitive is that your child must be busy doing formal activities, which then allows for them to not participate in any social activities like parties and sleepovers.
As long as they have an instrument, a sport, and tutoring, then you aren’t required to ensure they also have a childhood or friends.
I don't think you realize how social those activities like sport and orchestra and dance are, in and of themselves. And many parents don't do sleepovers for other reasons besides activities.
Well, they are social, but not in the way a play date, sleep over, or birthday party are. Do you find work team building events as social as a dinner party in your own home?
And yes, I do understand how social activities *can* be, but they’re not when you’re rushing your kids from one to the other. They’re not when they have absolutely no down time for your children to explore relationships outside of practice or events.
Your post just illustrates the obvious: parents believe “busy” is better. There’s no room for just making friends on the playground, or hanging out in the basement. It’s the reason so many people feel such a loss of social connection, why there is no such thing as “community” anymore (other than ethnicities that promote it), why more and more adults and young people feel socially isolated.
Without being dramatic, people don’t need therapy or worse later in life because they never learned to play the oboe. They do it because they are having trouble forming meaningful relationships with withering family, or feel isolated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, OP, it seems ironic to me that this thread has exactly proven your point about being competitively busy. Of course, the lesson that seems to be repetitive is that your child must be busy doing formal activities, which then allows for them to not participate in any social activities like parties and sleepovers.
As long as they have an instrument, a sport, and tutoring, then you aren’t required to ensure they also have a childhood or friends.
I don't think you realize how social those activities like sport and orchestra and dance are, in and of themselves. And many parents don't do sleepovers for other reasons besides activities.
Anonymous wrote:Well, OP, it seems ironic to me that this thread has exactly proven your point about being competitively busy. Of course, the lesson that seems to be repetitive is that your child must be busy doing formal activities, which then allows for them to not participate in any social activities like parties and sleepovers.
As long as they have an instrument, a sport, and tutoring, then you aren’t required to ensure they also have a childhood or friends.
Anonymous wrote:Much respect to the families with multiple kids. We have one and I cannot imagine getting more then one to the activities that he likes doing. During the school year we have one after school enrichment, one sport, Cub Scouts, and swimming. DS has flat out said no to tennis because he likes having some free days during the week. He asks to do the sport, enrichment, and Cub Scouts but those are more then enough.
I have no clue how people with multiple kids get them to everything. I mean, I do, because I see the carpooling and have picked up friends kids at school so they could go to event X with us, but it strikes me as so much more challenging.
Anonymous wrote:Well, OP, it seems ironic to me that this thread has exactly proven your point about being competitively busy. Of course, the lesson that seems to be repetitive is that your child must be busy doing formal activities, which then allows for them to not participate in any social activities like parties and sleepovers.
As long as they have an instrument, a sport, and tutoring, then you aren’t required to ensure they also have a childhood or friends.
Anonymous wrote:Skip tennis.
Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids?
Ours are 3 and 6. We sign them up for minimal stuff and usually do it as aftercare when possible. We almost never do play dates but my kids have plenty of friends at school and they hang out after school on the playground a lot. They have a lot of peers who have 2-4 things going on each weekend. The parents also have demanding careers and big expenses ($2M homes, multiple cars, big trips, etc.) and they always seem so tapped out — no wonder. I have no idea why people choose to live like that because none of them seem at peace with anything in their lives. I realize as kids get older they will do more, but my weekend is pretty sacred so until they are doing club ball, we don't sign them up for anything. That's family chill time.
Anonymous wrote:
The worst is yet to come.
Young children don't *need* activities unless they are extremely energetic, have special needs, or are showing precocious talent.
But in our "whole child, not just grades" society, middle and high schoolers need at least one, if not more, extra-curriculars to show colleges what they've been doing outside of school. By that time, they've got their favorite hobbies and beg you to keep doing X, Y and Z. For these older kids, some activities can start at 5am, or go until 10pm. Someone has to drive/carpool until they can reliably drive themselves to them. With multiple kids in a family at that stage, you get the feeling you're flying by the seat of your pants every season, all school year. And then there are the intensives/specialty camps in summer, to polish your skills... for the more expensive sports, we're talking tens of thousands of dollars a year.
So bide your time and save your money, parents of young children. Soon no one will have dinner at the same time and weekends will be on the road...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Competing for busy is seemingly a DC badge of honor in a game I don’t want to play. I want room for impromptu events and unstructured play. Praying that as our LO gets older we don’t fall into the trap!
That's why we left DC. I tried to schedule playdates and people were busy for the next SIX WEEKS! No thanks.